Francisco Herrera, the Elder (born c. 1590, Sevilla, Spain—died December 1656, Madrid) was a Spanish painter and engraver whose works mark the transition from Mannerism to Baroque.
Herrera is said to have been for a short time the master of Diego Velázquez, and he has been claimed as the originator of a new national style that culminated in the achievements of Velázquez. It seems, however, that Herrera was a follower, rather than a forerunner, of the new style. His earliest-known works, an engraving of Saint Ignatius of Loyola (1610) and a painting of the Pentecost (1617), are in the Mannerist tradition, far removed from the simple Caravaggesque naturalism of Velázquez’s earliest works. Herrera’s later compositions, such as The Apotheosis of St. Hermenegild (c. 1624), echo the Venetian manner of Juan de las Roelas. A marked development in the direction of naturalism first appears in three scenes from the life of St. Bonaventure commissioned in 1627 by the Franciscan convent in Sevilla; this may be attributed to the influence of Francisco de Zurbarán, who contributed four paintings to the series. Naturalism in Herrera’s work is accompanied by a broad technique, akin to José de Ribera’s; but in later works, such as St. Basil (1637), his brushwork became so coarse that it distorts the forms.
Sometime after 1638 Herrera moved to Madrid. He seems to have been unaffected by the later development of Velázquez or by other court painters. The elongated forms and elaborate draperies of St. Joseph (1648), his last documented work, nevertheless suggest that he may have been influenced by the style of Anthony Van Dyck. Herrera appears to have acquired considerable fame in Sevilla in his own time. His influence on other artists is revealed in The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes, which was the model for Bartolomé Murillo’s painting of this subject.